Substantial decline of organ preservation fluid contamination following adoption of ischemia-free liver transplantation: a post-hoc analysis

Preservation fluid (PF) contaminations are common in conventional liver transplantation (CLT) and presumably originate from organ or PF exposures to the external environment in a non-strict sterile manner. Such exposures and PF contamination may be avoided in ischaemia-free liver transplantation (IF...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of surgery (London, England) England), 2024-05, Vol.110 (5), p.2855-2864
Hauptverfasser: Lin, Jianwen, Li, Yefu, Fang, Tongdi, Wang, Tielong, Liao, Kang, Zhao, Qiang, Wang, Dongping, Chen, Maogen, Zhu, Xiaofeng, Chen, Yinghua, Chen, Honghui, Guo, Yiwen, Zhan, Liqiang, Zhang, Jiayi, Zhang, Tao, Zeng, Ping, Peng, Yaqin, Yang, Lu, Cai, Changjie, Guo, Zhiyong, He, Xiaoshun
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Preservation fluid (PF) contaminations are common in conventional liver transplantation (CLT) and presumably originate from organ or PF exposures to the external environment in a non-strict sterile manner. Such exposures and PF contamination may be avoided in ischaemia-free liver transplantation (IFLT) because of the strict sterile surgical procedures. In this study, the authors evaluated the impact of IFLT on organ PF contamination. A post-hoc analysis using data from the first randomized controlled trial of IFLT was performed to compare the incidence, pathogenic spectrum of PF contamination, and incidence of early recipient infection between IFLT and CLT. Multivariable logistic regression was used to explore risk factors for PF contamination. Of the 68 cases recruited in the trial, 64 were included in this post-hoc analysis. The incidence of culture-positive PF was 9.4% (3/32) in the IFLT group versus 78.1% (25/32) in the CLT group ( P
ISSN:1743-9159
1743-9191
1743-9159
DOI:10.1097/JS9.0000000000001163